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LEGAL FILING:
KATE M. NEISWENDER (State Bar No. 133234)
LAW OFFICE OF K.M. NEISWENDER
Post Office Box 24617
Ventura, California 93002
voice: 805/649-5575
fax: 805/649-8188
Attorneys for Petitioner
PATRICIA A. LOCK
SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOR THE COUNTY OF KERN
PATRICIA A. LOCK, an individual,
Petitioner, v.
COUNTY OF KERN, a political subdivision of
the state of California; and DOES 1 through 20, inclusive,
Respondents.
CASE NO.
PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDATE; COMPLAINT FOR
DECLARATORY AND INJUNCTIVE RELIEF
PETITIONER presents herself before this
Court requesting relief afforded her pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure
§1085 and alleges as follows:
Introduction
- This case involves an on-going pattern
and practice of abuse and failure to follow state and federal law at the
Animal Shelters in Kern County. Petitioner is asking that the County of
Kern be ordered to follow state and federal laws as specified herein, to
cease practices which prevent public access to impounded animals, and to
stop certain abusive practices which are harmful to impounded animals
without any reciprocal benefit to the animals or the public.
Parties
- Petitioner PATRICIA A. LOCK is a
resident of Frazier Park in Kern County, California.
- Respondent COUNTY OF KERN (hereinafter
referred to as the "County") is a political subdivision of the state of
California. The County operates essential services within its
jurisdiction, including the Animal Services Control Division.
- The Animal Services Control Division
(hereinafter “Animal Control”) is part of the Kern County Environmental
Health Services Department, and has primary responsibility for the
operation of two County-owned animal shelters, as well as shelters in
Lake Isabella and Ridgecrest. Between January of 2002 and August 31,
2004, Animal Control impounded more than 70,000 animals, and euthanized
more than 75% of those animals.
- The parties designated herein as Does 1
through 20, inclusive, are presently unknown to Petitioner, but which
are subdivisions or officers of the County who are responsible for the
actions described herein or for carrying out the functions of the County
and who may be affected by this litigation. Petitioner will amend this
Petition to specifically identify each such Respondent as required and
as the capacity and identity of each such Respondent becomes known.
Jurisdiction and Venue
- This court has jurisdiction under §§
1085 of the California Code of Civil Procedure.
- Kern County is a proper venue for this
Petition because the acts performed by the Respondents, including the
violations of law and statute, took place in Kern County, and the
impacts of the County’s decisions, policies and practices have had and
will continue to have severe adverse impacts upon Kern County, its
citizens, and its animals, as further detailed herein.
The Role of Animal Control In Kern County
Jurisdiction and Venue
- According to literature disseminated by
the County in 2004, Kern County is the third largest county in the state
of California and covers 8,172 square miles. The incorporated areas of
the county cover 400 square miles; while the remaining 7,772 square
miles is unincorporated. Animal Control is responsible for the
unincorporated areas of the county, which includes the unincorporated
municipalities of Frazier Park, Lamont, Mojave, Oildale, and Rosamond.
Animal Control provides all or partial animal control services through
contractual agreements to the cities of Arvin, Delano, and Maricopa.
- Animal Control operates two animal
shelters. The larger shelter is located at 201 South Mt. Vernon Avenue
in Bakersfield and the other one is located at 923 Poole Street, at the
Mojave Airport, in Mojave. Both shelters have facilities for both dogs
and cats. Additionally the shelters can accommodate other animals.
Occasionally larger domestic animals enter the shelter such as horses,
goats, or pigs as well as more exotic pets such as snakes, lizards, or
rabbits. In order to meet the sheltering needs of the unincorporated
area around the City of Ridgecrest and in the Kern River Valley the
Division has contractual service agreements with the City of Ridgecrest
and a private shelter in Lake Isabella.
- According to literature disseminated by
the County in 2004, while the population and the number of animals in
the service area has continued to grow the staffing levels for Animal
Control has remained constant since 1997. This is true despite an
estimated ten (10%) percent increase in the County’s population between
1997 and 2004, an increase of almost 100,000 residents.
FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION
(For Violation of Provisions of the California Food and Agricultural Code)
- Petitioner realleges and incorporates
herein by reference all the allegations set forth in this Petition as if
set forth herein in full.
- The provision of services concerning
domestic animals, including dogs, domesticated cats and feral cats, is
governed by primarily by the Food and Agricultural Code. That code was
amended in 1998 to include a number of provisions to promote the
adoption of companion animals, to extend shelter operating hours, to
extend holding times for animals, and to enable non-profit rescue
organizations to have more access to impounded animals. These amendments
are commonly known as the “Hayden Law,” as they were authored by State
Senator Tom Hayden (SB 1785). The Hayden Law is codified in various
places throughout the Food and Agricultural Code. Similarly, in 1998,
the code was amended to make it mandatory for all companion animals
being adopted by a member of the public to be spayed or neutered prior
to adoption; this amendment is commonly known as the “Vincent Bill,” as
it was authored by State Assemblyman Vincent. The Vincent Bill, AB 1856,
is codified at Food and Agricultural Code §30503 and §31751.3.
- The 1998 changes were responsible for a
number of significant changes to animal control operations statewide.
The Vincent Bill was designed to decrease the number of unwanted
animals, on a long-term basis. The Hayden Law made shelters more
accessible to the public and rescue organizations.
- From the time of the enactment of the
Hayden Law and Vincent Bill, the County has failed and refused to follow
the laws. It has been the County’s practice and policy to ignore the
mandates of the legislature, as follows:
- In violation of the Vincent Bill
(§30503), the County routinely adopts out dogs that have not been
spayed or neutered;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31108), the County has routinely euthanized dogs prior to the
expiration of the statutorily-mandated holding period;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31108.5), the County has routinely euthanized owner-relinquished
dogs upon impoundment, and routinely euthanized owner-relinquished
dogs prior to the holding period specified in §31108;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31108.5), the County has routinely allowed purported owners to
relinquish dogs without proof of ownership, as required by law; the
County does not even require the public to come in during business
hours, instead allowing dogs to be placed in an after-hours “drop
bin;”
- In violation of the Vincent Bill
(§31751.3), the County routinely adopts out cats that have not been
spayed or neutered;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31752), the County has routinely euthanized cats prior to the
expiration of the statutorily-mandated holding period;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31752), the County has routinely euthanized owner-relinquished
animals upon impoundment, and routinely euthanized owner-relinquished
animals prior to the holding period specified in §31752;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31752.2), the County has routinely allowed purported owners to
relinquish cats without proof of ownership, as required by law; the
County does not even require the public to come in during business
hours, instead allowing cats to be placed in an after-hours “drop
bin;”
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31752.5), the County has routinely euthanized cats that might be
feral prior to the expiration of the statutorily-mandated holding
period, and have failed to determine whether a cat is feral after the
close of the holding period through the use of a standardized protocol
(§31752.5(c)).
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31108(b) and §31752(b)), the County has established a pattern and
practice of failing to cooperate with non-profit animal rescue
organizations, by routinely denying such groups access to areas where
animals are located through the use of locked gates; by informing
shelter personnel that they are not allowed to call rescue groups even
if an animal is impounded that is targeted by rescue (i.e., personnel
are not allowed to call Golden Retriever Rescue when a Golden
Retriever puppy is impounded); and refusing to adopt to rescue
organizations;
- In violation of the Hayden Law (§17005
and §17006) , and numerous other policies and procedures set forth in
the law, the County has routinely refused to allow the public access
to impounded animals by, inter alia, keeping cats and kittens in a
locked area, and refusing to allow the public or rescue organizations
to view the animals; by keeping the majority of the dogs at the
shelters in locked areas away from the public and rescue
organizations; by refusing to allow members of the public to view the
animals in the locked areas unless they can describe the animal they
lost exactly, and then only if that description matches exactly the
description rendered by shelter personnel upon impoundment; by
refusing to allow animals to be photographed for rescue and adoption;
by mis-stating the physical descriptions of an animal; and by failing
to log in every impounded animal in the computer system, which thwarts
the public’s ability to locate and view a lost animal.
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§17005), and numerous other policies and procedures set forth in the
law, the County has made it a policy and practice to thwart the
public’s ability to adopt impounded animals by establishing a
“temperament test” that is administered upon impounded animals before
those animals can be viewed or adopted by the public. Such a test has
been found to deem a dog “unadoptable” if the dog is not capable of
walking on a leash; if it growls when a human takes its food away
(even though the County only feeds impounded animals once a day, in
violation of Penal Code §597(e)); if it growls; and numerous other
arbitrary and capricious “tests” that the vast majority of animals
fail. Once an animal fails the “test,” it is deemed “unadoptable” in
direct violation of §17005, and euthanized without the opportunity for
the public to view, interact or adopt the animal;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§17005(b)), Civil Code §1834, and Penal Code §597.1, the County has
established a practice and policy of euthanizing treatable animals,
without providing medical care to the animal or allowing the public or
rescue organizations to provide medical care; in addition, rescue
organizations and others have been refused adoption of an animal
because a shelter worker has said an animal is “ill,” without a
veterinarian present, without medical testing or other confirmation,
and without acknowledging the ability of the adopting person or entity
to provide medical care to the animal, if needed. Further, Civil Code
§1834 specifically requires "necessary and prompt veterinary medical
care" which has not been provided to many of the animals brought to
the County shelters.
- The County has failed in other and
further respects to be proven at time of the hearing in this matter.
- The County is required to comply with
the provisions of the Food & Agricultural Code, in every respect. The
County does not have any statutory exemption from complying with state
law on animal control and regulation.
- Petitioner has exhausted all
administrative remedies available to her and will suffer irreparable
harm if the relief requested herein is not granted.
- This Court is asked to immediately
enjoin any further violations of the law, as outlined herein, and to
order the County to take the following actions:
- Enjoin the County from adopting out
cats or dogs that have not been spayed or neutered;
- Enjoin the County from euthanizing
dogs or cats prior to the expiration of the statutorily-mandated
holding period;
- Enjoin the County from euthanizing
owner-relinquished dogs or cats upon impoundment, or euthanizing
owner-relinquished dogs or cats prior to the holding period specified
by law;
- Enjoining the County from allowing
purported owners of dogs or cats from relinquishing animals without
proof of ownership, as required by law and abolishing the after-hours
“drop bin;”
- Enjoining the County from euthanizing
cats that might be feral prior to the expiration of the
statutorily-mandated holding period, and mandating the use of the
statutorily-required feral testing protocols before euthanizing a cat
suspected of being feral;
- Mandating the County immediately
establish policies and procedures that will ensure cooperation between
shelter personnel and rescue organizations, as required by law;
- Mandating that the County immediately
unlock all kennel areas so that the public can have viewing access to
impounded animals, without having to describe an animal; mandating
that the public and rescue organizations be allowed to photograph
animals for rescue and adoption purposes; and, mandating that the
County log in every impounded animal in the computer system;
- Enjoining the use of the County’s
“temperament test” that prevents the public from adopting the majority
of the impounded animals at the shelters;
- Mandating that the County provide
medical care to animals with medical problems, and requiring that,
alternatively, that the County allow the public or rescue
organizations to provide medical care.
SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION
(For Violation of the Federal and State Laws Regarding The Use, Storage
and Reporting of Euthanasia Drugs)
- Petitioner realleges and incorporates by
reference all the allegations set forth in this Petition as if set forth
herein in full.
- Under Title 16, §2039 of the California
Code of Regulations, any employee of an animal control shelter who is
not a veterinarian or registered veterinary technician must receive a
minimum of eight hours of training in order to administer euthanasia
drugs to any animal.
- The County has consistently failed to
provide the required training to its employees, and as a result, Animal
Control personnel who euthanize animals at the County’s shelters do not
have the required training, in violation of law. The rationale for this
regulation is that certain animals are very difficult to euthanize
humanely. Very young animals and old or sick animals have small or
hard-to-find veins. Therefore, without proper training, someone would
have to insert a needle repeatedly to find a vein. If a vein is not
located, an animal can take a long time to die, often in great pain.
- Petitioners have exhausted all
administrative remedies available to them and will suffer irreparable
harm if the relief requested herein is not granted.
- This Court is asked to issue an
injunction, enjoining the County from allowing any untrained Animal
Control personnel to administer euthanasia drugs without with the
state-mandated training. THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION (Complaint For
Declaratory and Injunctive Relief)
- Petitioner realleges and incorporates
herein by reference all the allegations of Paragraphs 1 through 22,
inclusive, of this Petition.
- An actual controversy exists in that
Petitioner contend the County has failed, and continues to fail, to
follow the laws, as set forth herein. Petitioner further contends that
the County has established a pattern and practice of violations of law,
and that the incidents complained of herein are not isolated or random.
On the other hand, the County contends it has acted in accordance with
the law, and that its policies and procedures are consistent with the
law.
- This Court is asked to intervene and to
resolve this conflict, and to order the County to comply with law and
statute in regards to all operations of the Animal Control division and
all County-operated animal shelters.
WHEREFORE, Petitioner prays:
- FOR THE FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION: For an
order of this Court, enjoining the County from violating the law as
outlined herein, and ordering the County to take the following actions:
- Enjoining the County from adopting out
cats or dogs that have not been spayed or neutered;
- Enjoining the County from euthanizing
dogs or cats prior to the expiration of the statutorily-mandated
holding period;
- Enjoining the County from euthanizing
owner-relinquished dogs or cats upon impoundment, or euthanizing
owner-relinquished dogs or cats prior to the holding period specified
by law;
- Enjoining the County from allowing
purported owners of dogs or cats from relinquishing animals without
proof of ownership, as required by law and abolishing the after-hours
“drop bin;”
- Enjoining the County from euthanizing
cats that might be feral prior to the expiration of the
statutorily-mandated holding period, and mandating the use of the
statutorily-required feral testing protocols before euthanizing a cat
suspected of being feral;
- Mandating the County immediately
establish policies and procedures that will ensure cooperation between
shelter personnel and rescue organizations, as required by law;
- Mandating that the County immediately
unlock all kennel areas so that the public can have viewing access to
impounded animals, without having to describe an animal; mandating
that the public and rescue organizations be allowed to photograph
animals for rescue and adoption purposes; and, mandating that the
County log in every impounded animal in the computer system;
- Enjoining the use of the County’s
“temperament test” that prevents the public from adopting the majority
of the impounded animals at the shelters;
- Mandating that the County provide
medical care to animals with medical problems, and requiring that,
alternatively, that the County allow the public or rescue
organizations to provide medical care.
- ON THE SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION: For an
Order of this Court, prohibiting the County from using the drug Euthanol
on cats, and requiring all Animal Control personnel who administer or
who might administer euthanasia drugs immediately be provided with the
state-mandated training;
- ON THE THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION: For an
Order of this Court, ordering the County to comply with law and statute
in regards to all operations of the Animal Control division and all
County-operated animal shelters;
- For an order awarding Petitioner costs,
and for an order of attorneys' fees pursuant to C.C.P. Section 1021.5,
in this proceeding; and
- For such other and further relief as the
Court deems just and proper.
DATED: October ____, 2004
______________________________
KATE M. NEISWENDER
Attorney for Petitioner PATRICIA A. LOCK
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| VERIFICATION
I, PATRICIA A. LOCK, have read the
foregoing “PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDATE AND COMPLAINT FOR DECLARATORY AND
INJUNCTIVE RELIEF, “ and know its contents. I am the Petitioner in this
matter. The matters in this document are true of my own knowledge except
as to those matters which are stated on information and belief, and as to
those matters, I believe them to be true.
Executed on October ____, 2004, at Frazier
Park, California. I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the
state of California that the foregoing is true and correct.
___________________________________
PATRICIA A. LOCK
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| PROOF OF SERVICE BY FIRST CLASS MAIL
I, Kate Neiswender, declare as follows:
I am employed in the County of Ventura, state of California. I am over the
age of eighteen, and my business address is Post Office Box 24617,
Ventura, CA 93002. On October 22, 2004, I served the following document
entitled PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDATE AND COMPLAINT FOR DECLARATORY AND
INJUNCTIVE RELIEF by placing a copy thereof enclosed in a sealed envelope
addressed as follows:
County of Kern
Clerk of the Board of Supervisors
1115 Truxton Ave.
Bakersfield CA 93301
Animal Services Control Division
Environmental Health Services Dept.
201 So. Mount Vernon Ave.
Bakersfield CA 93307
California Attorney General’s Office
Request for Assistance - Private Attorney General Case
300 So Spring Street
Los Angeles CA 90013
I am readily familiar with our office’s practice for collection and
processing of correspondence and other materials for mailing with the
United States Postal Service. On this date, I sealed the envelope(s)
containing the above materials and placed the envelope(s) for collection
and mailing on this date at the address stated above, following our
office’s ordinary business practices. The envelope(s) will be deposited
with the U.S. Postal Service on this date, in the ordinary course of
business.
I declare under penalty of perjury under
the laws of the state of California that the foregoing is true and correct
and that this Proof of Service was executed on October 22, 2004 at Ventura
County, CA.
_______________________
Kate Neiswender
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PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT on October 29,
2004, 8:30 a.m. or as soon thereafter as this matter may be heard in
Department One of the Kern County Superior Court, located at 1415 Truxton
Ave., Bakersfield, California, 93301, Petitioner will move this court for
a Temporary Restraining Order, enjoining, preventing and prohibiting the
following:
- Under Food & Agricultural Code §31754,
an owner relinquished animal must be held for four days, not counting
the day of impoundment. Respondent County of Kern euthanizes the vast
majority of owner-relinquished animals within the first 24 hours of
impoundment. Such practice must be immediately enjoined.
- Under Food and Agricultural Code
§31752.5, any cats brought into the shelter and suspected as a "feral"
cat must be held for three days, not counting the date of impoundment.
On the fourth day, the Shelter is authorized by law to administer a
temperament test, to determine if the cat is indeed feral, or a domestic
cat that is simply frightened. Shelters are bound by law to develop
feral cat protocols to administer in such cases. Respondent County of
Kern euthanizes all cats deemed "feral" immediately upon impoundment,
and has never developed feral cat protocols. Such practice must be
immediately enjoined.
- Under Food & Agricultural Code § 30503
and §31751.3, all animals must be spayed or neutered prior to adoption.
Respondent County of Kern has no record of spaying or neutering any
animals, even though adoptions do take place. Such practice must be
immediately enjoined.
- Under Food and Agricultural Code
§31108.5 and §31752.2, a purported owner must provide proof of ownership
upon relinquishment of a cat or dog. Respondent County of Kern utilizes
a "drop bin" at the Mojave shelter, into which people may place unwanted
animals after hours, without proof of ownership. Such practice must be
immediately enjoined.
- Under the California Euthanasia Training
Guidelines, specifically Title 16, Section 2039 of the California Code
of Regulations, a non-veterinarian cannot be deemed to have proper
training without an eight hour course on Euthanasia, including inter
alia humane animal restraint techniques, safety training, and record
keeping. None of the technicians who euthanize animals for Respondent
County of Kern could produce proof of such training. All euthanasias of
shelter animals must be immediately enjoined, unless the procedure is
administered by a licensed veterinarian.
Each month, Kern County euthanizes
approximately 1,600 animals. For each day of delay, between 50 and 100
animals are destroyed by the County.
This motion is made on grounds Respondent
COUNTY OF KERN (hereinafter the "County") has failed to comply with the
Food and Agricultural Code and the California Code of Regulations as
stated hereinabove, in the operation of the two animal shelters under
County control; namely, Bakersfield and Mojave.
This Application will be based upon the
Declarations of Kate M. Neiswender, Nathan Winograd, Professor Taimie
Bryant, Judith Lotz, Judith Orr, Ursula Sauthier, Patricia Lock, and
Sherry Meddick; upon the Points and Authorities filed concurrently
herewith, upon all papers and pleadings on file in this action, and upon
such other evidence, oral and documentary, which may be presented at time
of hearing.
Dated: October ___, 2004
____________________________
KATE M. NEISWENDER
Attorney for Petitioner
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POINTS AND AUTHORITIES
- Factual and Procedural Summary
Respondent COUNTY OF KERN (hereinafter
referred to as the "County") operates two County-owned animal shelters
through its Animal Control Services Division, one in Bakersfield and one
in Mojave. The Animal Services Control Division (hereinafter "Animal
Control") is part of the Kern County Environmental Health Services
Department. Between January of 2002 and August 31, 2004, Animal Control
impounded more than 70,000 animals, and euthanized more than 75% of
those animals (see Verified Petition at ¶4).
The County's provision of animal control
services concerning domestic animals, including dogs, domesticated cats
and feral cats, is governed by primarily by the Food and Agricultural
Code. That code was amended in 1998 to include a number of provisions to
promote the adoption of companion animals, to extend shelter operating
hours, to extend holding times for animals, and to enable non-profit
rescue organizations to have more access to impounded animals. These
amendments are commonly known as the "Hayden Law," as they were authored
by State Senator Tom Hayden. The Hayden Law is codified in various
places throughout the Food and Agricultural Code. Similarly, in 1998,
the code was amended to make it mandatory for all companion animals
being adopted by a member of the public to be spayed or neutered prior
to adoption; this amendment is commonly known as the "Vincent Bill," as
it was authored by State Assemblyman Vincent. The Vincent Bill is
codified at Food and Agricultural Code §30503 and §31751.3.
From the time of the enactment of the
Hayden Law and Vincent Bill, the County has failed and refused to follow
the laws. There has been anecdotal evidence to this effect for years,
and a number of Kern County citizens have come forward with their
experiences at the Bakersfield and Mojave shelters, which will be
discussed in detail herein. However, a review of County records (through
a Public Records Act request) has provided unimpeachable evidence that
it has been the County's practice and policy to ignore the mandates of
the legislature, as follows:
- Under Food & Agricultural Code §31754,
an owner relinquished animal must be held for four days, not counting
the day of impoundment. Review of County records shows that Animal
Control euthanizes the vast majority of owner-relinquished animals
within the first 24 hours of impoundment. (See Declaration of Kate M.
Neiswender at ¶4(A)).
- Under Food and Agricultural Code
§31752.5, any cats brought into the shelter and suspected as a "feral"
cat must be held for three days, not counting the date of impoundment.
On the fourth day, if the Shelter wants to euthanize the animal before
the end of the normal four-day holding period, the Shelter is
authorized by law to administer a temperament test, to determine if
the cat is indeed feral, or a domestic cat that is simply frightened.
Shelters are bound by law to develop feral cat protocols to administer
in such cases. Animal Control euthanizes all cats deemed "feral"
within 24 hours of impoundment, and has never developed feral cat
protocols. (See Declaration of Kate M. Neiswender at ¶4(B)).
- Under Food & Agricultural Code § 30503
and §31751.3, all animals must be spayed or neutered prior to
adoption. Animal Control has no record of providing spaying or
neutering for any of animals it has adopted out to the public, even
though the County's own records do show some small number of
adoptions. (See Declaration of Kate M. Neiswender at ¶4(C)).
- Under Food and Agricultural Code
§31108.5 and §31752.2, a purported owner must provide proof of
ownership upon relinquishment of a cat or dog. Animal Control utilizes
a "drop bin" at the Mojave shelter, into which people may place
unwanted animals after hours, without proof of ownership. (See
Declaration of Ursula Sauthier and Declaration of Sherry Meddick).
- Under the California Euthanasia
Training Guidelines, specifically Title 16, Section 2039 of the
California Code of Regulations, a non-veterinarian cannot be deemed to
have proper training without an eight hour course on Euthanasia,
including inter alia humane animal restraint techniques, safety
training, and record keeping. The County could not provide a single
document showing that any of the technicians who euthanize animals for
Animal Control have such training. (See Declaration of Kate M.
Neiswender at ¶4(D)).
- Requested Relief
Petitioner asks that all euthanasias at
the County's shelters be immediately enjoined until the shelter
personnel have taken and have proof of the required eight-hour training
course, or unless the euthanasias are performed by a licensed
veterinarian.
Petitioner further asks that all
owner-relinquished animals be held for the required four-day holding
period mandated by law. Petitioner further asks that all feral cats be
held for full four days (which is the length of time required for
domestic cats) until the County can develop feral cat protocols, which
would enable the County to administer such protocols and potentially
could allow euthanasia after only three days.
Petitioner further asks that the "drop
bin" at Mojave be immediately closed and discontinued, as a violation of
the law requiring a purported owner show proof of ownership at the time
of relinquishment. Finally, Petitioner asks that any animal to be
adopted by a member of the public must be spayed or neutered prior to
adoption.
- Standards in the Animal Control Industry
Since passage of the Hayden and Vincent
bills, the animal control industry in California has often discussed the
proper procedures to follow. The industry standard at this time is
confirmed by Nathan Winograd, a long-time animal control administrator,
whose current job is to help animal shelters in California comply with
the law. He confirms in the Declaration attached hereto that he is not
aware of any shelter in California that euthanizes owner-relinquished
animals on the first day of impoundment, because the law requires that
these animals be held for four days, not counting the day of
impoundment, as required by Food & Agricultural Code §31754 and §31108.
Mr. Winograd further confirms that pursuant to Food and Agricultural
Code §31752.5, any cats brought into a public or private shelter in
California that are suspected as "feral" must be held for three days,
not counting the date of impoundment. On the fourth day, shelter
personnel are authorized by law to administer a temperament test, to
determine if the cat is indeed feral, or a domestic cat that is simply
frightened. Mr. Winograd confirms that animal shelters are bound by law
to develop feral cat protocols to administer in such cases.
Mr. Winograd confirms that pursuant to
Food & Agricultural Code § 30503 and §31751.3, all animals must be
spayed or neutered prior to adoption. Mr. Winograd confirms that
shelters in California are very careful to follow this law, because it
has helped control the unwanted animal population within their
jurisdictions. All animal control facilities in California with which he
is familiar follow this law.
Finally, Mr. Winograd testifies that all
personnel who perform euthanasia services are required to have the eight
hours of euthanasia training under the California Euthanasia Training
Guidelines, specifically Title 16, Section 2039 of the California Code
of Regulations. It is, he notes, industry standard for all euthanasia
technicians to have such training.
Thus, the County cannot claim that these
laws are not followed or are somehow unfair. The laws are in place,
other animal control facilities follow the laws, and the County must be
ordered to follow the laws as well.
- This Court Has The Authority To Issue An
Ex Parte Temporary Restraining Order In A Writ Proceeding
Restraining orders and preliminary
injunctions are appropriate in a writ of mandate proceeding (Camp v.
Board of Supervisors (1981) 123 Cal. App. 3d 334, 356). The statutory
provisions that provide for injunctive relief, C.C.P. §§525 to 534,
apply equally to writ proceedings (C.C.P. §1109; Camp v. Board of
Supervisors, supra, at 356).
- The Requested TRO Should Be Granted
Because the Test For Such Relief Is
Clearly Met; The Laws In Question Are
Clear and Unambiguous
There are five matters before this Court.
Each request for injunctive relief is based on the clear and unambiguous
language of statute or, in the case of euthanasia training, a
regulation.
- EUTHANASIA OF OWNER-RELINQUISHED
ANIMALS CANNOT OCCUR BEFORE THE ANIMAL HAS BEEN IMPOUNDED FOR FOUR
FULL DAYS
Food and Agricultural Code §31754
states:
"Except as provided in Section 17006,
any animal relinquished by the purported owner that is of a species
impounded by public or private shelters shall be held for the same
holding periods, with the same requirements of care, applicable to
stray dogs and cats in Sections 31108 and 31752, and shall be
available for owner redemption or adoption for the entire holding
period."
This is not an ambiguous statement. The
holding periods specified in Sections 31108 and 31752 state that a
stray dog or cat must be held four days, not including the day of
impoundment1. Animal Control's practice of euthanizing almost all
owner-relinquished animals within the first 24 hours is in direct
violation of statute. (See Declaration of Kate Neiswender at ¶4(A))
- ANIMAL CONTROL CANNOT BE ALLOWED TO
EUTHANIZE CATS SUSPECTED AS "FERAL" ON THE DATE OF IMPOUND, BUT MUST
HOLD THEM FOR AT LEAST THREE DAYS, AND DEVELOP TEMPERAMENT PROTOCOLS
Food and Agriculture Code §31752.5
states:
"Notwithstanding Section 31752, if an
apparently feral cat has not been reclaimed by its owner or caretaker
within the first three days of the required holding period, shelter
personnel qualified to verify the temperament of the animal shall
verify whether it is feral or tame by using a standardized protocol.
If the cat is determined to be docile or a frightened or difficult
tame cat, the cat shall be held for the entire required holding period
specified in Section 31752. If the cat is determined to be truly
feral, the cat may be euthanized or relinquished to a nonprofit, as
defined in Section 501 (c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, animal
adoption organization that agrees to the spaying or neutering of the
cat if it has not already been spayed or neutered. In addition to any
required spay or neuter deposit, the pound or shelter, at its
discretion, may assess a fee, not to exceed the standard adoption fee,
for the animal released."
The import of this section is that a
truly feral cat may be euthanized after only three days, not the four
days required by law, if a feral cat protocol is adopted and the
animal is tested.
In contrast, the County euthanizes all
cats brought in as "feral" within 24 hours of impoundment, does not
hold the animal for an owner, has not adopted and does not have feral
cat protocols, and does not release feral cats to rescue organizations
(see Declaration of Kate Neiswender at ¶4(B)).
- THE COUNTY MUST IMMEDIATELY BE
ENJOINED FROM ADOPTING OUT ANIMALS BEFORE SPAYING AND NEUTERING
Food & Agricultural Code § 30503 and
§31751.3 require all animals to be spayed or neutered prior to
adoption:
31751.3
- Except as otherwise provided in
subdivision (b), no public animal control agency or shelter, society
for the prevention of cruelty to animals shelter, humane society
shelter, or rescue group shall sell or give away to a new owner any
cat that has not been spayed or neutered.
The section regarding dogs reads:
- Except as otherwise provided in
subdivision (b), no public animal control agency or shelter, society
for the prevention of cruelty to animals shelter, humane society
shelter, or rescue group shall sell or give away to a new owner any
dog that has not been spayed or neutered.
The only exceptions in these sections
concern counties with populations of less than 100,000 and working
with rescue groups. Kern County has a population of more than 713,000,
according to the latest County estimates. The other exception has to
do with adopting out animals to non-profit animal rescue
organizations. This case will present a clear history of Animal
Control's problems in working with rescue, which is also a violation
of state law, but that issue will be saved for trial in this matter.
The County has no record of medical
treatment, showing the spaying or neutering of any of the animals
adopted out to the public (see Declaration of Kate Neiswender at
¶4(C)). In addition, a number of citizens have adopted animals from
the County, and none were spayed or neutered (See Declarations of
Judith Lotz, Patricia Lock, Judith Orr and Ursula Sauthier).
- THE COUNTY'S USE OF AN AFTER-HOURS
"DROP BIN" IS ILLEGAL UNDER FOOD AND AGRICULTURAL CODE §31108.5 AND
§31752.2
The language of these sections
prohibits the use of a drop bin, because the code mandates the County
obtain "proof of ownership" from a purported owner before accepting an
owner-relinquished animal. Section 31108.5 reads:
-
- Upon relinquishment of a dog to a
public or private shelter, the owner of that dog shall present
sufficient identification to establish his or her ownership of the
dog and shall sign a statement that he or she is the lawful owner
of the dog.
The section addressing cats is 31752.2:
- Upon relinquishment of a cat to a
public or private shelter, the owner of that cat shall present
sufficient identification to establish his or her ownership of the
cat and shall sign a statement that he or she is the lawful owner of
the cat.
It is grossly inconsistent with these
sections to allow an after hours "drop bin."
In addition, there is testimony from
citizens that the drop bin is utilized for "sport." Reports have
surfaced that people will drop a cat into a bin containing a dog, and
shelter personnel have told rescue organizations that dead cats and
"pieces of cats" have been found in the bins in the morning, with
aggressive dogs. This practice must be stopped immediately. (See
Declarations of Ursula Sauthier and Sherry Meddick).
- THE COUNTY CANNOT BE ALLOWED TO HAVE
UNTRAINED PERSONNEL ADMINISTERING EUTHANASIA IN VIOLATION OF STATE
REGULATIONS
Title 16, §2039 (a) of the California
Code of Regulations reads as follows:
- In accordance with section 4827(d)
of the Code, an employee of an animal control shelter or humane
society and its agencies who is not a veterinarian or registered
veterinary technician (RVT) shall be deemed to have received proper
training to administer, without the presence of a veterinarian,
sodium pentobarbital for euthanasia of sick, injured, homeless or
unwanted domestic pets or animals if the person has completed a
curriculum of at least eight (8) hours as specified in the
publication by the California Animal Control Directors Association
and the State Humane Association of California entitled "Euthanasia
Training Curriculum" dated October 24, 1997, that includes the
following subjects:
- History and reasons for euthanasia
- Humane animal restraint techniques
- Sodium pentobarbital injection
methods and procedures
- Verification of death
- Safety training and stress
management for personnel
- Record keeping and regulation
compliance for sodium pentobarbital
"At least five (5) hours of the
curriculum shall consist of hands-on training in humane animal
restraint techniques and sodium pentobarbital injection procedures."
Kern County has no records showing that
any of their vet techs have this training. Head of Animal Control
Services admitted to Petitioner's counsel, Kate Neiswender, that none of
his technicians have had the training, with the exception of one, and he
could not locate any documentation proving the training had occurred
(see Declaration of Kate Neiswender at ¶4(D)).
The rationale behind this regulation is
based on the humaneness of euthanasia. If an animal is old or sick, or
if it is very young, the veins are hard to locate. If an animal is
injected with Euthanol, but not in a vein, the animal can take a long
time to die and it is very painful.
- Why A Temporary Restraining Order Must
Issue At This Time Petitioner has prepare a Motion for Preliminary
Injunction, but in the few weeks that it will take for a notice motion
to be heard, more than one thousand animals will die in Kern County
shelters, some of them unnecessarily. Kern County euthanizes
approximately 20,000 animals per year, more than 75% of the animals that
come through its doors.
There are three criteria for injunctive
relief: (1) irreparable harm will occur if relief is not granted; (2) no
other adequate remedy at law is possible; and (3) Petitioner will likely
prevail on the merits of the case. All criteria are met in this case.
- Irreparable Injury: Animals Are Dying
Needlessly And In Violation of Law
The reasons behind these laws are
simple: these laws were intended to create an atmosphere in which more
animals were adopted, in which lost animals had a better chance of
being reunited with their owners, and in which fewer animals were
released to the public to create unwanted litters of puppies and
kittens. Following these laws help increase adoptions, increase the
number of lost animals reunited with owners, decrease the number of
unwanted litters, and decrease the number of animals euthanized. By
failing to follow these laws, Kern County is killing more animals
every day that need not be euthanized, and lowering or eliminating the
chances of some owners to ever see their lost animals again. The
County's actions harm not only the companion animals within their
care, but the owners of these animals as well.
The attached Declaration of Taimie
Bryant describes the process that was followed in 1998 to get these
laws passed. Professor Bryant is a professor of law at the University
of California at Los Angeles, and helped Senator Tom Hayden draft SB
1785. She explains that SB 1785 was the result of extensive study.
For example, in Los Angeles in 1998,
there were a half-dozen shelters to which a lost animal could be
taken. However, the County kept "banker's hours," and often closed at
the same time an average person got off work. If a person could not
search the shelters during the business day, then his pet could be
killed before he had a chance to look. Therefore, the law was changed
so that a shelter had to keep an animal for six days if it stayed open
only during the day; if it kept "worker-friendly" hours (evenings and
weekends), it needed to keep an animal only four days.
The story of "owner relinquished"
animals was often one of revenge and bitterness. It was determined
that in Los Angeles, up to 25% of the animals turned in to shelters by
"owners" were turned in by ex-spouses, unfriendly neighbors, or those
bent on revenge. Thus, the requirement was imposed of keeping owner
relinquished animals for the same length of time as strays, and
requiring a purported owner to provide proof of ownership.
The reasoning behind the Vincent bill
is obvious: if an animal is released to the public already spayed or
neutered, then it will not produce litters of unwanted animals,
refilling the shelters in the future. Studies in the past few years in
compliant jurisdictions have revealed that the strategy is working.
Fewer puppies and kittens are being turned into the shelters.
Another piece of the Hayden bill
required shelters to work with non-profit rescue organizations, to
keep adoption and lost-found posting current, and to check for
micro-chip tagging of stray animals.
Professor Bryant testifies that Hayden
and Vincent bills presented a comprehensive strategy for animal care
and control, in which the owners of lost animals were vigorously
sought; in which adoptable animals were made available to the public
and rescue organizations in an organized and friendly fashion; and in
which animals adopted out to the public were spayed or neutered before
leaving the shelters. The more animals that are adopted out, the
higher the revenue to the shelters. The cost of euthanizing an animal,
for example, is a significantly higher cost to a jurisdiction that if
that animal is adopted out.
Thus, for each day of delay, the County
of Kern is losing revenue. Animals are being needlessly killed. Animal
Control euthanizes approximately 20,000 animals a year. Thus, for each
month this matter is not resolved, more than 1,500 cats and dogs will
be killed... some of which could have been reunited with their owners,
some of which could have been adopted. This is a species of
"irreparable injury" that affects both humans and their animals, as
well as the County's revenue stream.
"Irreparable injury" has been defined
as "that species of damages, whether great or small, that ought not to
submitted to on the one hand or inflicted on the other." (Anderson v.
Souza (1952) 38 Cal. 2d 825.) The concept of "irreparable injury" is
inextricably linked to the inadequacy of any legal remedy open to the
injured party; an injunction should issue only if the legal remedy
(i.e., damages) does not afford adequate relief or is difficult to
ascertain (Thayer Plymouth Center, Inc. v. Chrysler Motors Corp.
(1967) 255 Cal.App. 2d 300.)
In environmental cases, irreparable
injury is almost always found when construction will destroy that
which a petitioner seeks to preserve. Certainly, destruction of
hundreds of cats and dogs is analogous to the destruction of wildlife
habitat (see, e.g., San Joaquin Raptor/Wildlife Rescue Center v.
County of Stanislaus (1994) 27 Cal. App. 4th 713, 741).
- There Is No Other Remedy Available At
Law
Clearly, the imposition of damages will
not solve this problem. In fact, this Petition does not seek damages,
only injunctive relief. Death cannot be reversed by a court of law.
The only remedy available is an injunction.
- Petitioner Is Likely To Prevail On The
Merits Petitioner has presented an overwhelming case showing the
County has failed to comply with the Food and Agricultural Code. The
County cannot deny its own records, records produced pursuant to a
Public Records Act request, and showing the precise violations of law
alleged herein.
- Conclusion
For the reasons stated herein, Petitioner
asks this Court to issue an injunction, as follows:
- For an injunction, mandating the
County hold all owner relinquished animals for four days, not counting
the day of impoundment;
- For an injunction, mandating the
County hold all cats brought into its shelters for four days, and if
the County wishes to euthanize cats suspected as "feral," then the
County must develop feral cat protocols;
- For an injunction, mandating the
County immediately begin spaying or neutering of every animal adopted
out to the general public, with exceptions only for rescue
organizations as allowed by law;
- For an injunction, eliminating the
after-hours "drop bin" at the Mojave shelter forthwith;
- For an injunction, prohibiting the
euthanasia of any animal by any Kern County employee unless he or she
can provide this court with proof of eight hours of training under
California Euthanasia Training Guidelines, or unless the procedure is
administered by a licensed veterinarian.
Dated: October ____,
2004__________________________
KATE M. NEISWENDER
Attorney for Petitioners
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| DECLARATION OF KATE M. NEISWENDER
I, KATE M. NEISWENDER, declare and state as
follows:
- I am the attorney representing the
Petitioner in this matter. I have personal knowledge of the facts
contained herein, and if called upon could and would testify competently
thereto.
- On September 3, 2004, I faxed and mailed
a Public Records Act request to Kern County Environmental Health
Services, Animal Services Control Division, a true and correct of which
is attached hereto. I asked for impoundment and euthanasia records for
all animals in the County's shelters for the period 2002 to the present.
- I was contacted by Matt Constantine, who
is the apparent head of that department. He asked for additional time to
comply. On September 27, 2004, he mailed me a letter, telling me that
the records were available for inspection; the letter did not reach me
until Friday, October 1, 2004 and I made an appointment to see Mr.
Constantine on Monday, October 11, 2004. Mr. Constantine informed me
that he did not have records for the Lake Isabella and Ridgecrest
shelters, but that the records he produced were complete and accurate
for the Bakersfield and Mojave shelters.
- I inspected the records on that date,
and determined as follows:
- REGARDING EUTHANASIA OF
OWNER-RELINQUISHED ANIMALS: I randomly checked County records for each
and every month for the years 2002, 2003 and 2004. In each month, I
found owner-relinquished animals who were killed within 24 hours of
impoundment. To be certain of the pattern and practice, I looked at
every entry for April 1-7, 2004 and July 21-28, 2004. I discovered
that almost every owner-relinquished animal was killed within 24 hours
of impoundment. In a rare instance, an owner-relinquished animal was
kept longer than one day, and was adopted. I have attached highlighted
excerpts of records for 2002, 2003 and 2004. The actual records are so
voluminous that it would not be practical to attach them, but the
records are available.
- REGARDING EUTHANASIA OF FERAL CATS: I
randomly checked County records for each and every month for the years
2002, 2003 and 2004. In each month, almost all feral cats were killed
within 24 hours of impoundment. On a rare occasion, a feral was kept
longer than 24 hours, but they were always euthanized before the end
of the mandatory four day holding period. To be certain of the pattern
and practice, I looked at every entry for April 1-7, 2004 and July
21-28, 2004. I discovered that every feral cat was euthanized before
the end of the holding period, except for a handful of animals who
escaped. None was adopted. I have attached highlighted excerpts of
records for 2002, 2003 and 2004. The actual records are so voluminous
that it would not be practical to attach them, but the records are
available.
- THERE IS NO RECORD OF SPAYING OR
NEUTERING: The medical records provided by the County do not include
any evidence of spaying or neutering of animals prior to adoption, in
violation of the Vincent Bill. The requirements for prompt and
necessary medical care are in the code, but do not appear to be part
of the County's practices; this issue will be addressed at trial.
- THERE IS NO RECORD OF EUTHANASIA
TRAINING: The law requires eight hours of euthanasia training.
Although I asked for such information, no such records were provided.
I asked Matt Constantine about this. He told me that one of his
technicians had the training, but they could not find the proof. The
other technicians did not have the training.
- The records were copied that day
(October 11, 2004) by Attorney Diversified Services, and delivered to me
on October 22, 2004. A complete copy of the records can be made
available for the court's inspection. I have attached only excerpts of
records, with highlighting. The County delivered its records to me in a
format that shows intake date on one set of records, but euthanasia
dates on another set of records. Thus, in order to determine when an
animal was impounded and euthanized, you have to match the Impound
Number (always beginning with the letter "A") to the euthanasia records.
I declare under penalty of perjury, under
the laws of the State of California, that the foregoing is true and
correct. Executed this 23rd day of October 2004, at Ventura, California.
_______________________________
KATE M. NEISWENDER
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| DECLARATION OF NATHAN WINOGRAD
I, NATHAN WINOGRAD, declare and state as
follows:
- I am the former director of operations
at the San Francisco SPCA, an organization that handles thousands of
animals each year in the City and County of San Francisco. After that, I
was head of operations at the Tompkins County (New York) animal shelter.
I currently work as a consultant to animal shelters in the state of
California and the country, helping these facilities comply with the
law, increase their adoption rates, and lower their euthanasia rates. I
have personal knowledge of all facts contained herein, and if called
upon could and would testify competently thereto
- I have five years experience in animal
control, and am very familiar with the laws and regulations that govern
public shelters in California. In 1998, two significant bills were
passed by the Legislature, that affected the manner in which the animal
control industry did business. I was involved in the implementation of
those bills, and - since the passage of the bills - I have worked
closely with the authors, the legislature, and animal control lobbyists
in Sacramento to formulate a comprehensive strategy for improving animal
control operations in the State of California. Since passage of the
so-called Hayden Law (Senate Bill 1785) and the Vincent Bill (AB 1856),
people within the animal control industry in California have often
discussed with me the proper procedures to follow.
- The industry standard at this time is
well-established. For example, shelters in California do not euthanize
owner-relinquished animals on the first day of impoundment, but instead
holds the animals for four days, not counting the day of impoundment, as
required by Food & Agricultural Code §31108 and §31754. Pursuant to Food
and Agricultural Code §31752.5, any cats brought into a public or
private shelter suspected as "feral" must be held for three days, not
counting the date of impoundment. If a shelter wants to euthanize a cat
before the end of the usual four-day holding period, shelter personnel
are authorized by law to administer a temperament test, to determine if
the cat is indeed feral, or a domestic cat that is simply frightened. In
my current job, I work closely with numerous animal control facilities
in California; all of them follow these laws. There is no dispute in the
industry whether these laws need to be followed.
- Pursuant to Food & Agricultural Code §
30503 and §31751.3, all animals must be spayed or neutered prior to
adoption. The shelters with which I work are meticulous in following
this rule, because it has helped control the unwanted animal population
within their jurisdiction. In a County with a population in excess of
100,000, there is no dispute in the animal control industry that an
animal must be spayed or neutered prior to adoption, unless the animal
is too young, or if there is a medical problem.
- All of the personnel who perform
euthanasia services are required to have the eight hours of euthanasia
training under the California Euthanasia Training Guidelines,
specifically Title 16, Section 2039 of the California Code of
Regulations. It is industry standard for all euthanasia technicians to
have such training. Again, in my new position, I work closely with
numerous animal control facilities in California; all of them follow
this law.
I declare under penalty of perjury under
the laws of the state of California that the foregoing is true and
correct.
Dated: October ___, 2004
____________________________
NATHAN WINOGRAD
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Law Office of K.M. Neiswender
Lawyers ~ Consulting
Post Office Box 24617
Ventura, California 93002
voice: 805.649-5575
fax: 805.649.8188
e-mail: kmn@inreach.com
November 11, 2004
Mark Nations
Kern County Counsel's Office
1115 Truxton Ave.
Bakersfield CA 93301
Re: Lock v. County of Kern (Kern County Case No. 254024)
County Refusal To Take In Stray and Abandoned Animals
By Facsimile and U.S. Mail: 661-868-3805
Dear Mr. Nations:
I have received word from my client that
County Animal Control Director Matt Constantine has announced that County
Shelters will no longer accept more than 36 dogs and 11 cats per day,
which is approximately half of the usual number of strays received by the
shelter in any given day. This is most troubling.
According to Food & Agricultural Code
§31105, the County shall provide for the "taking up and impounding of all
dogs which are found running at large in violation of any provision of
this division."
Furthermore, in Civil Code §1815(c), an
"involuntary deposit" is made "By the delivery to, or picking up by, and
the holding of, a stray live animal by any person or public or private
entity." Under §1816 (b), "A public agency or shelter with whom a thing is
deposited in the manner described in Section 1815 is bound to take charge
of it, as provided in Section 597.1 of the Penal Code."
Thus, it is beyond comprehension that Mr.
Constantine thinks that he can simply stop following state law on the
taking up and caring for stray and abandoned animals, simply because he
has been ordered to comply with the holding periods mandated by law. State
law is not a buffet line. Mr. Constantine cannot decide which laws he
wants to follow.
His actions appear to be a back-door attack
on the judge's order. I do not want to jump to conclusions. Please either
confirm or deny Mr. Constantine's actions. If he has indeed decided to
stop accepting stray and abandoned animals, then we will file for ex parte
relief with the court.
Sincerely,
Kate M. Neiswender
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Update of Plaintiff, Pattie Lock vs. County
of Kern
Since Judge's Order, November 10, 2004
Following the Judge's Order at the Temporary Restraining Order that Kern
County follow the laws they have continued to ignore for the past five
years, KCAC tried yet another (illegal) tactic and began turning away
stray animals brought to the shelter.
In one horrifying instance, a man trying to
turn in a feral cat he had trapped who was turned away from the shelter.
The man let the cat go in a nearby field, where it was attacked and badly
injured by hawks.
Both Matt Constantine and his supervisor
Steve McCalley told reporters that KCAC had no mandate to take in strays,
showing a bizarre lack of knowledge of the laws that these two people in
charge of Animal Control in Kern County have.
Kern County Counsel Nations was adamant
that the County would follow the laws and would not turn away dogs and
cats; that they were scrambling to gather cages and pens together to deal
with this crisis, while Matt Constantine ordered the shelters to turn them
away, which was witnessed by the news media.
While the shelters were turning animals
away, there were dozens of empty cages in the one dog building at
Bakersfield that is accessible to the public. A visitor asked why only
five dogs were available for adoption, and was told that only these five
had passed temperament testing. The person who does the temperament
testing is not expected to be available until late next week, which means
all animals whose time is up before then can expect to die also, rather
than only the approximately 90% or so who routinely apparently don't pass
the temperament test.
In his own declaration, Matthew Constantine
stated that they began spending money to comply with the Hayden Law five
years ago, which extended the holding period for stray animals from three
to four days. He claims they spent $500,000 to $600,000 to expand the
Bakersfield Shelter, which has been finished since 2001.
He further states that KCAC has expended
$600,000 to $800,000 to comply with the Hayden and Vincent mandates,
contracting for spay and neuter (which is not done at the Mojave shelter),
trained employees (although a rush to train all employees within 30 days
to be certified in euthanasia was begun upon Court Order), paid shift
differentials and hired more staff, (although he states that the new
building remained vacant due to lack of funds to staff it) "and incurred
many other expenses attempting to comply with the Hayden Law and the
Vincent Bill"- which KCAC records show in no way have been complied with.
He further states that he estimates another $40,000-$60,000 will be spent
in 2004-2005 for compliance. In what way we can't imagine.
He states, as did the County Counsel in
court, that no money has been received from the state as reimbursement for
the money the County spent to comply with the new laws; however when
questioned in court, Counsel admitted that the County had never asked the
State for reimbursement.
So, since 2001, all of the additional space
at the county shelter has been empty? Not at all. When the City of
Bakersfield and the SPCA came to an inability to resolve their contract in
2003, KCAC stepped in and gave the extra space to the City of Bakersfield-
for a price of course. This was not an obligation by the County; this was
a choice.
Since they were already unable to meet
their current duties, it seems absurd that they would take on anything
else. Probably this extra money went to provide veterinary care for
impounded animals, spay and neuter programs at Mojave, coordinating with
rescue groups and volunteers to improve adoptions of animals? Not at all.
Where did it go?
According to Matt Constantine, it appears
very little money has actually been spent for compliance with these state
mandates in over five years, and I am sure the State of California will
see it the same way, leaving Kern County short of money they badly need.
Kern County Animal Control has effectively thumbed their noses at the law,
as they now are doing with the Superior Court Judges' Orders.
What happens to citizens when they
flagrantly defy the law? Try it and see.
Pattie Lock (
pattie@ShelterWatch.com )
Plaintiff
Lock vs. County of Kern
http://www.ShelterWatch.com
Find a new friend for Life
http://www.amrt.net
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